Chapter 3:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Romans 2 Corinthians
1 Corinthians 3
Verse 1. And I, brethren - He spoke before, ver. 1, of his entrance, now
of his progress, among them. Could not speak to you as unto
spiritual - Adult, experienced Christians. But as unto men who
were still in great measure carnal, as unto babes in Christ - Still
weak in grace, though eminent in gifts, chap. i, 5.
Verse
2. I fed you, as babes, with milk - The first and plainest truths of
the gospel. So should every preacher suit his doctrine to his
hearers.
Verse
3. For while there is among you emulation in your hearts, strife in
your words, and actual divisions, are ye not carnal, and walk
according to men - As mere men; not as Christians, according to
God.
Verse
4. I am of Apollos - St. Paul named himself and Apollos, to show
that he would condemn any division among them, even though it
were in favour of himself, or the dearest friend he had in the
world. Are ye not carnal - For the Spirit of God allows no party
zeal.
Verse
5. Ministers - Or servants. By whom ye believed, as the Lord, the
Master of those servants, gave to every man.
Verse
7. God that giveth the increase - Is all in all: without him neither
planting nor watering avails.
Verse
8. But he that planteth and he that watereth are one - Which is
another argument against division. Though their labours are
different. they are all employed in one general work, - the saving
souls. Hence he takes occasion to speak of the reward of them that
labour faithfully, and the awful account to be given by all. Every
man shall receive his own peculiar reward according to his own
peculiar labour - Not according to his success; but he who labours
much, though with small success, shall have a great reward. Has
not all this reasoning the same force still? The ministers are still
surely instruments in God's hand, and depend as entirely as ever
on his blessing, to give the increase to their labours. Without this,
they are nothing: with it, their part is so small, that they hardly
deserve to be mentioned. May their hearts and hands be more
united; and, retaining a due sense of the honour God doeth them
in employing them, may they faithfully labour, not as for
themselves, but for the great Proprietor of all, till the day come
when he will reward them in full proportion to their fidelity and
diligence!
Verse
9. For we are all fellowlabourers - God's labourers, and
fellowlabourers with each other. Ye are God's husbandry - This is
the sum of what went before: it is a comprehensive word, taking
in both a field, a garden, and a vineyard. Ye are God's building -
This is the sum of what follows.
Verse
10. According to the grace of God given to me - This he premises,
lest he should seem to ascribe it to himself. Let every one take
heed how he buildeth thereon - That all his doctrines may be
consistent with the foundation.
Verse
11. For other foundation - On which the whole church: and all its
doctrines, duties, and blessings may be built. Can no man lay than
what is laid - In the counsels of divine wisdom, in the promises
and prophecies of the Old Testament, in the preaching of the
apostles, St. Paul in particular. Which is Jesus Christ - Who, in his
person and offices, is the firm, immovable Rock of Ages, every
way sufficient to bear all the weight that God himself, or the
sinner, when he believes, can lay upon him.
Verse
12. If any one build gold, silver, costly stones - Three sorts of
materials which will bear the fire; true and solid doctrines. Wood,
hay, stubble - Three which will not bear the fire. Such are all
doctrines, ceremonies, and forms of human invention; all but the
substantial, vital truths of Christianity.
Verse
13. The time is coming when every one's work shall be made
manifest: for the day of the Lord, that great and final day, shall
declare it - To all the world. For it is revealed - What faith beholds
as so certain and so near is spoken of as already present. By fire;
yea, the fire shall try every one's work, of what sort it is - The
strict process of that day will try every man's doctrines, whether
they come up to the scripture standard or not. Here is a plain
allusion to the flaming light and consuming heat of the general
conflagration. But the expression, when applied to the trying of
doctrines, and consuming those that are wrong, is evidently
figurative; because no material fire can have such an effect on
what is of a moral nature. And therefore it is added, he who builds
wood, hay, or stubble, shall be saved as through the fire - Or, as
narrowly as a man escapes through the fire, when his house is all
in flames about him. This text, then, is so far from establishing the
Romanish purgatory, that it utterly overthrows it. For the fire here
mentioned does not exist till the day of judgment: therefore, if this
be the fire of purgatory, it follows that purgatory does not exist
before the day of judgment.
Verse
14. He shall receive a reward - A peculiar degree of glory. Some
degree even the other will receive, seeing he held the foundation;
though through ignorance he built thereon what would not abide
the fire.
Verse
15. He shall suffer loss - The loss of that peculiar degree of glory.
Verse
16. Ye - All Christians. Are the temple of God - The most noble
kind of building, ver. 9.
Verse
17. If any man destroy the temple of God - Destroy a real
Christian, by schisms, or doctrines fundamentally wrong. Him
shall God destroy - He shall not be saved at all; not even as
through the fire."
Verse
18. Let him become a fool in this world - Such as the world
accounts so. That he may become wise - In God's account.
Verse
19. For all the boasted wisdom of the world is mere foolishness in
the sight of God. He taketh the wise in their own craftiness - Not
only while they think they are acting wisely, but by their very
wisdom, which itself is their snare, and the occasion of their
destruction. Job v, 13.
Verse
20. That they are but vain - Empty, foolish; they and all their
thoughts. Psalm xciv, 11.
Verse
21. Therefore - Upon the whole. Let none glory in men - So as to
divide into parties on their account. For all things are yours - and
we in particular. We are not your lords, but rather your servants.
Verse
22. Whether Paul or Apollos, or Cephas - We are all equally
yours, to serve you for Christ's sake. Or the world - This leap
from Peter to the world greatly enlarges the thought, and argues a
kind of impatience of enumerating the rest. Peter and every one in
the whole world, however excellent in gifts, or grace, or office,
are also your servants for Christ's sake. Or life, or death - These,
with all their various circumstances, are disposed as will be most
for your advantage. Or things present - On earth. Or things to
come - In heaven. Contend, therefore, no more about these little
things; but be ye united in love, as ye are in blessings.
Verse
23. And ye are Christ's - His property, his subjects. his members.
And Christ is God's - As Mediator, he refers all his services to his
Father's glory.
Chapter 3:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Romans 2 Corinthians
This version of Wesley's Notes on the Bible is a derivative of an electronic version, Copyright 1997, by Sulu D. Kelley. All rights reserved. Used by permission. It may not be modified or used commercially without permission of Wesleyan Heritage Publishing and Sulu Kelley. A special thanks to Mr. Kelley and Wesleyan Heritage Publishing for permission to create and post this version of Wesley's Notes on the Bible.
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